Inside the paper, the president of the CRAN, an umbrella group of black associations, draws a parallel with the violence of the "banlieues", France's poor suburbs.

For Patrick Lozes, the headbutt was unacceptable but sprang from a similar sense of exasperation.

"Why do we come to understand Zidane," he asked, "but not the young people in the suburbs?"

Dissenting voice

The left-wing daily Liberation offers a rare voice of dissent to the chorus of approval for Zidane's appearance.

However deplorable, it notes, insults on the football pitch have always existed.

The astonishing thing was that at 34 years old, Real Madrid's former playmaker had fallen for what his team-mate Lilian Thuram described as an "Italian trap".

The paper goes on to compare Zidane's sending-off with that of David Beckham in the 1998 World Cup against Argentina.

Then, the reaction of the 23-year-old Englishman was contrite, recognising that he had damaged his team.

"Zidane did no such thing yesterday," says Liberation. "He did not have a word for his team-mates, whom he perhaps cost the World Cup."

'Tackle racism'

Some find what he had to say about racism in football just as significant as his account of the headbutt.

Throughout his long career, says L'Equipe, never had Zidane evoked the subject with such conviction.

The headbutt came towards the end of extra time

In the second interview he gave, on France's main private channel TF1, Zidane spoke of his desire to see Fifa tackle racist comments on the pitch.

He singled out the Italian senator and prominent Northern League politician Roberto Calderoli, who has been quoted as saying that France "sacrificed its identity by fielding a team of blacks, Islamists and communists".

"Is that not worse than what I did?" he asked. "It shocked me."

France has not lost its admiration and affection for Zinedine Zidane.

A newspaper poll this week found that 61% of French people had already forgiven him over the headbutt.

Some politicians would dearly love to be so revered after such a disaster.

On Friday, another world-famous figure will address the French nation.

The contrast to the frenzy surrounding Zidane's television appearance could not be greater.

If another opinion poll is to be believed, two-thirds of French people believe President Chirac's Bastille Day speech is of no importance.